sawchuk1971
Registered User
- Jun 16, 2011
- 1,538
- 587
If the Red Wings won the cup in 1995, maybe the neutral zone trap would not be adopted by other teams?
According to Lemaire, it was in vogue quite a bit before 1995, including himself when he was playing hockey for Bowman in the 70s, they won a lot and allowed very few goals with it which popularized it in the nhl.
Salary disparity is the elephant in the room here. Markets where great players weren't going to sign with in the early-90s led to a shift. Devils, Sabres, Panthers, etc.I've said it many times, it was caused by Bill Ranford having a bad game on April 24, 1996.
In all seriousness, like others said it was a combination of factors, from systems, to the short shift game, to salary disparity, to decisions by referees.
There were other factors that contributed to the awful drop in scoring post 1994. Goalies started to really get absurdly inflated with their pads. Garth Snow...heck look at Mike Vernon circa 1989 and then Vernon 1995.
Also the stupid and unnecessary crease rule, where good legitimate goals were disallowed because a player had his toe in the crease. That's all. Didnt have to touch the goalie. It was no goal if you had even a skate anywhere in the crease. This unfortunately discouraged players from going to the net aggressively as they used to...goalies could now see a lot more shots that in the past might get by them due to screens etc
clutching and grabbing in general became much more tolerated
Yes, there was lots of defense played before the '95 Devils, for many decades. Some similarities when comparing different teams and different eras, and many differences.According to Lemaire, it was in vogue quite a bit before 1995, including himself when he was playing hockey for Bowman in the 70s, they won a lot and allowed very few goals with it which popularized it in the nhl.
and certainly many NHL teams were playing types of "trap" systems by 1995.
It was so common that there were proposed rule changes to attempt to ban it at the GM meetings in 93-94.Which.
Strong defense doesn't mean trap. I don't recall anyone ever thinking Demers teams were boring.
Yeah re-watch the 1994 playoffs. Seems to be the best balance between speed, skill and physicality. Goaltending too was quite good, and the with Ranger winning that year I think the NHL lost a huge opportunity to market the game before it entered the DPE....Remember when Mario called the NHL a "garage league" in the early 1990s? 1992 I think. Just watch the hooking and holding. He wasn't kidding. People saying it was easier to score, well, can you imagine Mario being able to skate without someone jet skiing on his back? It is hard to imagine how good he'd be. Brett Hull in 1998 had that one big rant about hockey. I can't remember why he ranted after one particular game back then but he was sitting in the dressing room and just went on a tirade. It was the "the game sucks" rant that caught the league's attention. Of course, they didn't do anything about it, Bettman and co. just did the whole woe is me thing. I miss the physicality of the 1990s NHL. I really do. Teams hated each other and you saw it. But we got something right in the modern game, and that was the hooking and holding actually being called. It is a shame that the NHL can never properly combine the two, I guess the best would have been the early 1990s, maybe late 1980s, where the intensity was there but the game was still fun to watch offensively. Now the game is free flowing, but if you breathe on a player the ref calls a penalty quicker than during a Chiefs 4th down.
It was so common that there were proposed rule changes to attempt to ban it at the GM meetings in 93-94.
I never have thought that goalies all of the sudden got better. I hated that lazy argument. It was "Well, the goalies are just better". Ah, no. They have more padding. They aren't better or faster.
Yeah re-watch the 1994 playoffs. Seems to be the best balance between speed, skill and physicality. Goaltending too was quite good, and the with Ranger winning that year I think the NHL lost a huge opportunity to market the game before it entered the DPE....
Plenty of teams...Anaheim, Florida, Hartford, San Jose, Montreal...the list goes on and on...That doesn't answer which teams were playing the trap prior to the devils.
Yeah re-watch the 1994 playoffs. Seems to be the best balance between speed, skill and physicality. Goaltending too was quite good, and the with Ranger winning that year I think the NHL lost a huge opportunity to market the game before it entered the DPE....